More events have been announced for the 18th annual Glasgow Film Festival (GFF), taking place from 2 - 13 March 2022 in a new hybrid format, with screenings both in cinemas and online via the Glasgow Film At Home platform.
GFF will screen a programme of African Stories - a collection of contemporary films celebrating the rich diversity of life in countries across the continent. The films range from Casablanca Beats, a joyous salute to the power of music to transform lives in Morocco and Khadar Ayderus Ahmed’s multi award-winning Djibouti-set The Gravedigger's Wife, to documentaries including Once Upon A Time in Uganda, about one man's mission to create an action movie industry in Uganda. GFF is working with Scotland's Africa in Motion film festival on events around some key titles. This programme of films will combine to provide a taste of a vital and booming filmmaking continent.
This year's programme will also shine a light on the pioneering films of Edith Carlmar, Norway's first female feature film director. Experience Death Is a Caress (1949), the first Norwegian film noir, opening the floodgates to the 21st century cult of Scandi Noir; madcap comedy caper Fools In The Mountains (1957); the illuminating portrait of addiction Young Woman Missing (1953) and her candid final feature The Wayward Girl (1959) which marked the screen debut of Liv Ullmann - all screened on beautiful 35mm.
The festival has previously confirmed the return of two of its most popular strands. The free morning screenings of modern masterpieces and cult classics are back, focusing in 2022 on Winds of Change: Cinema in '62, with big screen outings for To Kill A Mockingbird, Dr. No, The Manchurian Candidate and more.
For the first time ever, GFF's gala premieres will screen simultaneously at both the festival's home venue, Glasgow Film Theatre, and at cinemas across the UK including London, Manchester, Sheffield, Aberdeen, Dundee, Edinburgh and Stornoway. Alongside its big screen outings, the festival will build on the huge success of its 2021 digital edition, which took place during lockdown, and a selection of films will be accessible online to audiences across the UK with a specially curated programme available to watch on GFF's digital platform, Glasgow Film At Home.